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Show THE BEAVER COUNTY WEEKLY' ALIBHCAIURL1Y SENDS DADDY3EVQIEQS FA DYTA F i EAC!L GHU.VJJ i niiii in BEAVER. UTAH UTAH BUDGET THIS PRIS0HEG3 The war mothers of Park City are forming' an autfUary to the American ( 1,1 -- 7 About S5 Legiota. 7 per cent of the coal miners In' the Cartn county coal fields are now at woi W " i. Morgan county teachers held theii Institute .last. week. Ninety-fivper ' cent of the teacher were present From the estate of the latedlrs. Bus-SeirSage, wMToTed lr'NeWTOfk On November ,4, 1018, tht state. of. UX In : Inheritance will receive, lERyousnoiiiEii . . v . 11 ; r "In the firat ylace," Bald Happy Compton, "I must tel everyone what 1 look -- like.-. And In : the , second place I must tell everyone what I am. "In e 'I I: Hi, V , - fact Vcsetella Ut haps At would be tetter, ' to tell I . everyoneam first - what I ot all. '' "I J; t have . been asked, to tell' my story,' to tell It myself,' and that If I do so, lot of ' boys ; and girls will hear of roe, "" "It's "not that I so - especially "I Came Along. ? want T boys , and s ' girls' to hear of me for I wouldn't want to leave tny mistresses for anything and I don't want a ' home by any . manner of r means. , ,f one "Only both , my mistresses, named Louise and the other named Ada, have asked to have ,me tell my story so others would know what a hire creature I am. "That Is, they say T Anil tunnni T fhlnlr om htlrtm so nice and Fve met their fine they're friends I've rather food Idea of a ' boys and girls. "But I roust get started, mustn't If People and creatures of .all sorts shouldn't take forever about telling their stories, I've been told, ... , Tea, I roust tell who I am, In the very first place of all , . "I'm ' a dog. Tm not any special breed, I'm not what Is known as thoroughbred, but they say I'm bright er than a great many thoroughbreds. Tea glad they think. I'm bright, and that they like me.. . "I was a little waif dog first of all. Louise and Ada had been promised a dog. Their daddy had, told them that the first chance he had he would go and buy them a dog. ' Then I came along, a lonely, homeless little waif dog. "They took me In and fed me and loved me and made me warm and ' . btPPT. "When their - daddy asked them about the dog he was to buy for them .Louise-- Mid f "'Such dogs as those, In kennels, which are for sale, will get homes, for they will be In good condition, but this Is a homeless little dog and I'd rather have him. He will be happy here and he will be loved here.- - No one could love him more than I do,' ""Except the way I love him, said Ada, and to prove how much she loved me she put roe down by her on the pillow and covered me up and then Louise stroked my (head and I went off Into the dreamland of dogs. "They both loved me so right away and they still tove me to, and I know how much they always will love me. "Because they could see how happy I was to be no longer homeless and miserable they called me Hnppy. It's such a nice name, and they have given ae their last name, too Happy Comptoo.. Isn't that finet . I am brown with - little white touches on my paws. The hind toes ob all of my feet greatly amuse my two mistresses. I wear a little white tinder lay neck, like a cravat or a necktie, you know. ' I never change it, f course, because It Is a part of me. , "My eyes are brown and the tip of ' my nose Is brown' and' my whiskers are brown. All a soft, pretty shade of brown, too. Tea, I look as brown and soft as a dog could look and I'm . t small, too, "They say I'm just a nice armful to love and to play with. "Oh, I do have such a good, timet ' rtrst I lived with them in a little place near the" tea.'' Ij was so ' happy! there, and then! we came to a blgi u place where, i I ""went out ltf a" great' deal. v "Like an dogs, -Tm devoted to in , .automobile. Then; I go for walks In " , , anlu"-"-temob- the parkland have a -- , " S0 good time.' " "No pne ever' ' quarrels or fusses where I live. No one Is cranky or horrid or spiteDown by Her," ful. . . . "They gave me a good name' and I live up to tny name. I certainly 'am hapfty. It's an' easy name for a little brown dog In a lovely home to live up to. Tm glad they didn't call me Beauty or Good Boy or something like that Such names would have been . harder to live up to. . i "Bat Happy Is so easy, and I shall always live op to It, for there Is no reason why I shouldn't, - I'm a happy little brown' dog' for" I belong to Ada and to Louise, and they're Just as nice and junt as wonderful as they can be. And Happy knows I", iv'".'; Encourage the Boys. Farmer will do well to encourage ' their boys to "engage In the Junior ctuh work If they wish to encourage ;them to stay on thefarro. It will help make the bov a oarlner, 'Vv. . V,i w J. . , 0' fhe American army abroad has rejiutriated the JI7.00U German prtMier' la the- prison camp at Prance, without waiting for the offldul ratification of the senate of the peace treaty.- - A big batch of the prisoner ' 1 f ' . . 4 . . . is here seen leaving the stockade. ' e, - , mayor-ele- ct m Compound-Restore- d Her Health. t t tu very weak; Thiladelphia, Pa. "I Jweys tired, my back ached, and 1 felt, sics.iv mwk u uif time. :l went to a doctor and bo. said I bad nervous indigestion, which added to i my weak condition kept me worrying .most of the time and ho said if I could not stop that, I could not get- well. I heard so much about LydiaE. Pinkham'a Veiretable ; Com hnsband wanted me to try it rrand my it for a week and felt a little better. I kept it up for three months, and 1 feel fine and can eat anything novr without distress or nervousness. "Mrs, J. Worthlike, 2842 .North Taylor St, Philadelphia Pa., . , ,., The majority of mothers nowaday overdo, there are ao many demand 'upon their time and strength; the result is invaxiaDiy a weaaeneo, nervous condition with headaches, back-acIrritability and depression and toon more serious ailments develop. It is at such periods in life that LydiaE. Pinkham'a vegetable Compound will restore a normal healthy condition, aa ItdidtoMr. Worthline. ' City flreirien of Salt Lake have peti tioned, the. city commission for an in crease of, wage which amounts lo $35 a month for firemen and S3 monthly ' ' Elacksnakes to Trail ... '" ' r for ' lieutenants 1 . ; Rats as Traps Fail .Carrying the .wishes of the Utah American Legion embodied in fifteen resolutions three delegates to the na New Lexington. Blackenakes 4 tional convention In Minneapolis were will be corraled and turned loose ' In the Union station here In an sent from Utah.' . ti "effort o exterminate" rats -- that ; Uintah county was 4n-- . nvt to9aeod. GROTLSHORTHORN BEEF of ' . have, almost taken Tb Putaas OkUl Oo., In to the state treasurer tho taxes colpossession ' of California, raaaatlr : the placed ' '" " ' '.(! ' i a lected under the 1919 levy. The total aiarkciatf BiKirtborn aimra walftalag Employees havef used traps, ' tax collected for remittance to the I.U Iba ou frau. thw " awrar Uataa VMia ferrets, " cats and poison without state was $4544.31. " "; . u ' ': kaf aioapt tJ : Sraia kor at vaanloc ila avail, Fourteen-year-ol- d Waterfall Irving tbef bad .ith lwm o4Hundreds of dollars, worth of waiita ua ewnaoaiin, will recover from the injury' suffered j aura onaraetanaiia, damage has been done to merto (row Stauttharaa,! when he was accidentally shot by a eoNiin f not Bilkers. Tarn chandise and parcels post packbtaad anluni ara tad. hu Salt at Lake, unless some In- and man. tor tsfonaatton playmate to taa witia in left the ages building nights fection should develop. "". 4 AmetlMUt Bharthra Braedera' aaaartafl and merchants are complaining. ' TtttU CUeaco, tu. At. The county commissioners declined UDMUr , The rats are large and black-snake-s care to to build a central institution are now considered their for the indigent, aged. Infirm and only foe. feeble-mindeat the suggestion of the Merchants of Ogdea association.' The digging of beets and potatoes some with difficulty progressed for project reforming the church, but the Belgians were determined that through the week in the northern agri-Haapia aaok tra ol otanrt, ma. a, aaHaa.such reformation should not be Im- cultural regions, particularly the " posed from without When the Bel- Cache valley, because ot the snow. An Indication. 'resisted At a meeting of the stockholders of he declared Its constigians nwhat , makes you, so. nure. Trotsky-ltution annulled, sent an armed force the Lehi Irrigation company last week a. more prudent mn,.thai) LenlpeT" Into the country, and was met with a the articles of Incorporation wf re declaration that he no longer was amended so as to provide for the fHe. doesn't get shot, at so often. duke ot Brabant and that the Belgians purchase of more water for the ays-terhenceforth would be an Independent 'ASPJRIN FOrT COLDS, known a"ttur United lieople,- - to-bSeveral families In Brlgham City are States of Belgium. ' quarantined for smallpox, and new Ktrnt M Bayer 1 on G&aaina "Though the Belgian United 8tatea en Res ar,e being reported. The health was short lived, largely because the officers are doing all In their, power great powers of Europe declined to to prevent further spread of the disset a precedent by recognizing It, and ease, encouraged Joseph's successor in re- t Utah sheepmen, fearing that the sale conquering it, the seed of independence of Australian and New Zealand wool In thus planted by the historic university America the latter during part of No bloomed , again a half century later, cause a vomber of th will depression 1914." revealed and itself gloriously in market have protested to the govern run-uuw- n, PLAN TO REBUILD y. hv . J louvain Library uscripts, Its archives, Its gallery of great portraits of Illustrious rectors, chancellors, professors dating from the time of Its' foundation, which pre served for masters and students alike a noble tradition, and were an Incite ment in their studies, all this accumuDESTROYED EARLY 11 WAR lation of Intellectual, of historic and of artistic riches, the. fruits ot the la bors of five centuries ail Is In dust' 2oflpaphc Society Criticises Acta of. . "The city of Louvain ever will be German Invaders , In Wantonly remembered ti the scene" of the granting to the Belgian people by Duke Belgian ArtGreat Wrecking ' ' Wenceslaus ot the 'joyous entry, and Beat of Learning. the university win be associated with j . . Mt K n 'j. i v that character's preservation, more eators are launching a movement to than four centuries later, when Kaiser raise funds to rebuild the famous li- Joseph, the 'crowned anarchist of Aus tried to deprive Belgians of their brary of the University of Louvain, tria, rights, destroyed by the German" invaders ancient .. "The circumstances of that resistot war. the in The Louvain, early city Launch Educators Movement to Raise Nec essary Fun3s. American , v" t " .1 the "Oxford of the low countries,' Is described in the following bulletin from the Washington headquarters of ttrt National Geographic society; ''Not only the University of Louvain; an "Object lesson' in Ml Belgium and ' France by the German army. Early to 1013 a group of professors of other countries drw up a petition expressing strong Imlignation and abhorrence. at- the wholesale destruction of ancient buildings that has marked the invasion of Blglum and France "by the German 'army" and protesting In the itrongest terms against the continuance of so barbarous and reckless a tho-dty- unl-rersl- ty 1 ...: 4'a. policy ance form one moiy bond of union between Belgium and the United 8tates ot America, for it took place just ten years after the Declaration, of Independence was signed, an act which left a deep Impress tipnn the Belgian. Joseph's Move Against Holland. 4 "It will be recalled that Emperor Joseph, brother of Marie Antoinette, had tried to abolish Holland frontier forts. : He won a temporary victor because Holland at that time was embroiled with Greek Britain over the former.' recognition of the United States of America.' . . "Next he turned to Belgium with a . 1 1 ( -- uCthraa-faar-oi- . Rely On Cuticnra ForJSjuTToiibles inTViiSoaawWBTlS). a n. J e- 4 , , - , T i iviaps Barren Coast Bel-glu- m . -- ment German Professors Make Reply.' "To this a group of German unlver ilty professors, among them Gerhart Hquptmann, Max Iletnhardt and Randolph Eucken, replied that it was not American Explores .Northern true that, their troops had treated we Rim of but thu Continent. that, anway, brutally must decidedly refuse to buy a German defeat at the cost of saving a '' r'M work of art , Harold Nolce, Aoecmpanied ; Only by "If, Louvain has contributed little - Eskimos, Making Way. East- to scientific achievement It had a treward on Feot ., (). '" mendous effect upon philosophic and ; "'.' religious thought It baa been said Seattle, Wash. An American exthewas chrtf that the city's product plorer, Harold Nolce, formerly a memology. , But Germany's contempt for ber of Stefsnsson'a party ! working that kind of culture is reflected un- his way eastward ta foot along the consciously In Baedeker's guidebook route of the northern rim of the con' of 1010 which describes It Is 'a dull tinent according to?- word" received place with 42.200 Inhabitants.' He expects to- reach the HudThus the German guide casually here. son country and civilization some Bay of Inde dismisses the entile Belgian ' 7 next time summery' pendence, an early home of the Euro Storker Storkeraon, formerly secpean weaving Industry, and a treasure In command: of the Stefansson ond house of marvelous art works. In one from of his most famous pastorals, Cardinal party,' who arrive here recently acsnid Nolce, North, far that, the Mcrcler, now a visitor In the United only'.Jby EaStlmoa, Is procompanied havoc the describes SUtes, wrought ceeding slowly and mapping portions In Louvain thus:' 'In this dear city of Louvain, per of the coast Jilnee as. he goes. A stretch of the coast line of Victoria petually In my thoughts, the magnificent Church of St Peter will never re-c-tf Lahd," heretofore unmapped,- Is being htm. rtntrred fiby farmer"" The a splendor.""" VerTlU" clent .College of f St Ives," the ' art ' Nolce may visit the Interior of Vicschools, the consular and- commercial toria Lund,' which, according to all schools of the university, the old mar- reports, hss never been explored by kets, our rich library with Its collec- white men. ' All . explorers, t traders tions, Its unique and unpublished man and trappers who have touched Vic toria Land have journeyed along its shores only. Stefansson found the tribe ot "blond Eskimos" tn the Vic toria Land country. ' Nolce has no ship and but few sup plies. Ha depends . almost entirely upon his gun for his living. Stefans j , son, his former chief, who Is noted among explorers as being able to live off the barren white lands of the North; probably taught Nolce how to get about without carrying many sap-- , ii piles.' ' Nolce's parents live In teattle. The explorer is young In years, having graduated from a high school here about eight years ago. He went North In 1912 with Capt Louis Lane on the schooner Polar Bear. When Stefans. son bought the Polar Bear from Lane Nolce shipped as a member of the crew.' Later, when . Stefsnsson 'decided to return to the outside world. Nolce left the party and remained In the North. His parents expect him to return to Seattle next year. f 'Practically all the live stock In Utah has left the summer range and the movement to winter range Is In rapid progress," is the view of If. M. Justin,' agent of the department of agricul' ' ture for Utah. Efforts of Supt George N. Child to have a parent-teachorganization formed 4n every school in the' state Is meeting with the hearty approval of educators, according to letters received at the superintendent's office. In his report to the board of educa CL IL Skidmore Won, Superintendent sayathere are '1845 students between the ages of 13 aad 17, inclusive, in the Boxeider school district and that 209 ar not attending school Utah's gobs are making good, their,' record for promotions being better than that of any other state in the Intermountaln region, Is the statement of Lieu. Com. L. It Mann, head' ot the local navy recruiting office: ' ' ' The promoters of the Ogden live--! stock show to be held In Ogden Jun. nary 8, 9 and 10, report' that the stock-raisefrom the Intermountaln state bare announced their Intention of having exhibits on hand for the event, , The county commissioners of Summit county have applied for assistance :rom"t)ie Torest""servrce"ln"'coh8lruct- lng the road between Oakley and Hay den. The road is to he thirty lx. miles long and will cost approximately er r., i tostst on rBayer Tablet of AaDlrln" Id a "Bayer package, containing proper direction for. Cplda,, Pin, head. ache, Neuralgia,, Lumbago,, arid Name "Bayer? means genulno Aspirin . prescribed , ;by physician for raneteenyearst. Handy jin boxes of 12 tablets cost Aspirin is trad nark, of Bayer, Manufacture of,J4ono sceticacldester of Salicyllcacld. Adr. JRheu-matls- m. few-cent- ' Never Judge a "ring by tfie Jeweler same on the boxt " - ' rs waive Half taU In. Har-- Hoae, Homestead. Pa. The police arrest ed their first "stocking legger" in the person of, Clara Hobson and found the prisoner had 12 r half pints of whisky $120,900. hidden In her hose. - Timber-sale, ' - WTHatLariiQ Brick? Morning lameness, sharb twinses whts bending and an H day 'backache; aacll it eanas enough to suspect kidney .complaint. If you feel tired all the' time and are annoyed by disxy, spells, headaches and ineraUr kidney Jsction. yqa hats additional , proot nd should set (joickly to 'prevent 'mors; serious' kidney ironbfa. Os Dosa's Kidney Pilli, the remedy that is seomumendM arery-wherby grateful nsers. ,V9r , , neighbor! , : e, ll AUtihCase birtcheY, T.'0;tl! N. East ., Tooals, Vt uuji, rather aavaro aaya: Y'f., baa, ttjsclt kldnay troubla. Tlrat it began bakahe and. my back was coni tama and alantly tor. I kepi settlna won until 1 was us aarioui rondition. . I was toUi I had vravaLart Thar out of tne ordinary are I i t T a f. asiisa aw at At Km the Man tl forests vf kidney veaknea.,' 1 PAPER MONEY PUZZLES SLAVS southern Utah, according to word to ua4 Doan's Kidney Puis and I was soon the local' forest service at Ogden. ''It MttMl. MIM H Currency In Such a Scrambled CondU' Is" stated that oak' and maple brush g G ttmf t at Amr giars, SO Tftaw Is being sold to tlon That It Hurts Business companareas which the end of the war left i of Country. ies to'be usedlu connection with ' with their rich surface. soil plowed nn-- ; purposes.' : Not the least of the. ills "Belgrade. tier by artillery,' sown with- dangerous Need of school cafeterias, which 'are Is the scram that .beset Jugo-Slavtun exploded shells and cut up by trenchsome district in of Utahj Is fopnd' bled condition of Its paper currency. es and thousands of miles of rusting The paper money of half a dozen shown, educators nuy, in the public barbed wire. The devastated area em- rountrlea la tn circulation lu various schools of Ogden, where, according to tah a triad aad taakad sawitdy mm tha acta pmtity and effactivaiy and martalna braced 4 .500.000 acres. Ot this ap- ports of the kingdom of the Serbs, figures prepared by the superintendao saaataav m UMfransdy by aaking ot to and State ent given Superintendent proximately 1,000,000 acret nsva been Croats and Slovenes. . In Belgrade It N. 890 are Child, there paplls returned to the 'farmers and 300,000 self the. "krone" of Austrian; ances- George who eat cold luncheons every dnj. acres are ready for seed. More than try Is still the. unit by which all com The government dos not Intend to . 8,000 miles ot barbed wire .have been modities are priced. e abandon the road as a is further The situation compticutxd ' tn I Low Key?1' 'J disentangled and carried away In the mall to officials who ot that the fact ratio route, the according, by exchange ... , Joe .,., What wus 'tlie of his operation. tciir between the different moneys varies have been) In Duchesne, to investigate UlkT ''-CotnmlKRloner Tardieu added that a frum .to day.., conditions A rumor Ms lwn current day Bob There was'6 tenor to country whlrh had lost 'dearly J.OOO,-00- 0 it; he-h' Indlrvctly, the chaotic currency thst the rosd would be abandoned In a bass voire.or killed workers, inrapacltated sltaatlqn has aggravated the problem favor of tho Price-Myto- n route. by war: which had been deprived by of 'proristonlng the country by Im - To offer and snp-po- rt the, . of Its productive peding the movement of surplus food invasion of Moffat county, Colorado, la of capital and which nevertheless- of its stuffs from one section to another. the movement of the Commercial club own efforts hsd accomplished such a Fanners who possess a surplus which and Governor Bamberger for the conshowing hsd a right to rety on the ef- they would willingly sell under stable struction f a railroad Into the Uintan a, V fective help' of Us allies to "restore money conJltlcns decline to barter a basin of citizens delegation country, completely It economical snd financial them for paper whose value Is .oar of Moffat county will visit Salt Lake,' status. i m V ' thing today and another tomorrow; : November 10, SjHaa a m fyt Cax Oaah I)waa0atfn..t4 s beingimade on REMOVE WAR'S SCARS meat-packin- Has Francs ( , . Rebuilt Already 60,000 Houses. , . meati-smokin- , - a Much of Railroad and Canal Systems Hsve Been Put Into ' j Shape Again. , mmmmm f ' "' ' For Irritated Throats . i ft . '"" . . . t , Water survey of the state under the nacted by the Thirteenth legis lature Is, to begin at na arj date under the supervision of the state en' gineer, p., . t. A grocery store at Hyde Park was ' destroyed by fire. A large coal oil can In the store kept people frpm entering the building after the fire was discovered. Patriarch John Duke died at Heber Mr. Duke City- ar the age of 82. was one the the pioneer settlers of that ' locality and was the father of the f per- (. ;4. - HAPPY COMPTON. M Capt Andre Tardieu, member of the French Peace commission, has given Interesting figurce on the reconstruction work accompllKhed since the armif the MO.OOO stice. Sixty thousand have been houwa wrecked by shell-Or- e rubuiUy 2,018 kilometers of the'Si'W kilometers of rattvrsy.tlemroyed have been repaired and TOO of the 1.673 of cauala rendered otlwn are Of tho 1,100 again In' tlmmlsxlon. plants destroyed, S8S have been Equally remarkable progress la bong ramie in restoring to cultivation a the ((Iovq stated regions the vast -- IIclper-Duchesn- P 'g 0 -- - , as - RV one-fifth- Nttlht I'inrnino , ti Evfe KeeoVbur Halrri Cloan Claar |